Myrlie Evers-Williams, the first full-time female chairperson of the NAACP, finds honor in being the widow of Medgar Evers, the civil rights leader whose 1963 murder energized the protesters who brought an end to legal forms of segregation. But she doesn't want her identification to end there. "I am much more than that," she said in a recent phone interview. "So was Coretta Scott King and Dr. Betty Shabazz," she added, referring to the widows of civil rights martyrs Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. These women, among 20 in all, get a fuller-than-usual recognition in the traveling exhibit "Freedom's Sisters," a project sponsored by Ford Motor Company Fund and produced by the Smithsonian Institute Traveling Exhibition and the Cincinnati Museum Center. The interactive exhibit offers photography, video and audio. Launched in March 2008 in Cincinnati, it includes educational and community outreach and scholarships for local students. In its final leg, the exhibit comes Feb. 4 to the Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center in Harlem and runs through April 22. The exhibit focuses on the under-acknowledged roles of women in the fight for civil and human rights throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Another woman honored by the exhibit is Sonia Sanchez, who in late December was named poet laureate of Philadelphia. Sanchez, a poet-activist known for her writings on "neoslavery" and sexism and who helped raise the political consciousness in the 1960s and 1970s, is honored by the exhibit as a pioneer in academia and activism. She also helped introduce black studies to universities and taught the first course on black women in literature at the University of Pittsburgh at a time when using the term "black," rather than Negro, was considered radical. "Young women (and men) need to know these 'herstories' because they need to know where they are at this point in history," Sanchez said in an interview. "Whatever young people have in jobs, in universities...it's because of the work of many of these women that you didn't even hear about." Filling the Gender Gap Rosa Parks, who refused to move to the back of a segregated bus in 1955, is part of the media iconography of the civil rights era. But very few other women are portrayed as being part of that realm. This exhibit fills in the gender gap with testimonials to women such as Dorothy Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women for 40 years who died in 2010; Ella Jo Baker, a community organizer who guided emerging leaders in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and other organizations; and Fannie Lou Hamer, whose testimony at the 1964 Democratic National Convention helped influence the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. "During the civil rights movement Dorothy Height was at the table, she was one of the big six," said Pamela Alexander, director of Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services, the exhibit's funder, based in Dearborn, Mich. Alexander said Height once told her about getting left out of photographs or cropped out when she was standing at the end of a lineup. "She wasn't going to stand to the side. She learned to put herself in the middle of the picture both literally and figuratively," Alexander said. Evers-Williams said Height played a critical role in organizing the 1963 March on Washington, where more than 200,000 people gathered in the capital to protest the social and political obstacles facing African Americans. "The men were in disagreement over who should do what," said Evers-Williams. "Dorothy Height stepped up and said, 'If you can't do this, move out the way and let us take it over.' She was the epitome of what women stood for and what they did do."